Network and Workflow Design and Standardization in a Large Distribution Center

The retail industry is experiencing exploding growth in the digital segment and a shift in consumer delivery expectations. While distribution networks and the individual facilities were constructed to fulfill demand for the wholesale and retail channels, this growth is requiring companies to evaluat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Frigo, Clare
Other Authors: Graves, Stephen
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139457
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author Frigo, Clare
author2 Graves, Stephen
author_facet Graves, Stephen
Frigo, Clare
author_sort Frigo, Clare
collection MIT
description The retail industry is experiencing exploding growth in the digital segment and a shift in consumer delivery expectations. While distribution networks and the individual facilities were constructed to fulfill demand for the wholesale and retail channels, this growth is requiring companies to evaluate their network and facility operations to meet digital demand speed that consumers have come to expect. This thesis evaluates both the overall network design and the variability within daily operations that impact overall speed to customer. Optimization was used to evaluate the overall distribution network. The demand distribution was used to determine where to place facilities, which channels to ship from each facility, and where to ship product from to minimize transportation costs, transportation time to customer, and improve sustainability. The optimization reviews these key metrics for different potential network scenarios that could be implemented to improve the network. Within the distribution centers, variability in incoming orders causes variability in the time required to complete batches of orders (waves) before shipping them out. A model was developed based on standard times and wave data to capture real-time variability. This model can be used in conjunction with cross training to smooth the work across the major work areas and improve overall predictability.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1394572022-01-15T03:09:27Z Network and Workflow Design and Standardization in a Large Distribution Center Frigo, Clare Graves, Stephen Yang, Maria Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering Sloan School of Management The retail industry is experiencing exploding growth in the digital segment and a shift in consumer delivery expectations. While distribution networks and the individual facilities were constructed to fulfill demand for the wholesale and retail channels, this growth is requiring companies to evaluate their network and facility operations to meet digital demand speed that consumers have come to expect. This thesis evaluates both the overall network design and the variability within daily operations that impact overall speed to customer. Optimization was used to evaluate the overall distribution network. The demand distribution was used to determine where to place facilities, which channels to ship from each facility, and where to ship product from to minimize transportation costs, transportation time to customer, and improve sustainability. The optimization reviews these key metrics for different potential network scenarios that could be implemented to improve the network. Within the distribution centers, variability in incoming orders causes variability in the time required to complete batches of orders (waves) before shipping them out. A model was developed based on standard times and wave data to capture real-time variability. This model can be used in conjunction with cross training to smooth the work across the major work areas and improve overall predictability. S.M. M.B.A. 2022-01-14T15:12:35Z 2022-01-14T15:12:35Z 2021-06 2021-06-10T19:13:08.513Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139457 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Frigo, Clare
Network and Workflow Design and Standardization in a Large Distribution Center
title Network and Workflow Design and Standardization in a Large Distribution Center
title_full Network and Workflow Design and Standardization in a Large Distribution Center
title_fullStr Network and Workflow Design and Standardization in a Large Distribution Center
title_full_unstemmed Network and Workflow Design and Standardization in a Large Distribution Center
title_short Network and Workflow Design and Standardization in a Large Distribution Center
title_sort network and workflow design and standardization in a large distribution center
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139457
work_keys_str_mv AT frigoclare networkandworkflowdesignandstandardizationinalargedistributioncenter